Film Review
After making his mark on the theatre as a playwright and director,
Robert Thomas began his somewhat less distinguished career as a film
director with this ebullient comedy, which was the perfect vehicle for
rising star Annie Girardot to vaunt her immense comedic talents.
Thomas's main claim to fame is that he authored the award winning stage
play
Huit femmes, which was
adapted as
8 femmes (2001) by
François Ozon, but he is also remembered for directing some of
the most risible French comedies of the 1980s, including
Mon curé chez les nudistes
(1982) and
Mon curé chez les
Thaïlandaises (1983). His first film as a director is
probably his best.
La Bonne soupe is not the most
inspired or original of French comedies (it's essentially a Feydeau
farce on rollerskates), but equipped with a cast of mouth-watering
proportions (Girardot is just the cherry on an exceedingly rich and
tasty gâteau), it manages to elevate itself above the mundane and
makes a highly enjoyable romp. With its humorous account of one
woman's dizzying ascent up the social ladder, which she achieves by
seducing and exploiting any unsuspecting male who comes her way, the
film passes muster as a feminist satire and presages Girardot's later
association with strong-willed pro-feminist roles.
Here Annie Girardot heads a stellar cast in which her older self is
played by an equally charismatic Marie Bell, who manages to be both
funny and moving in one of her last screen roles. (The sequence
in which the younger Marie-Paul says farewell to her youth and becomes
the older woman, by the simple device of Giradot seeing herself
reflected as Bell in a mirror, is an inspired Cocteau-esque
touch.) As Bell recounts her life story to a sprightly
Claude Dauphin a succession of vignettes are rolled out, in which
Girardot gets close up and personal with some of French cinema's
leading lights, an impressive roll call that includes Daniel
Gélin, Bernard Blier, Jean-Claude Brialy, Raymond Pellegrin and
Gérard Blain, with singer Sacha Distel showing up briefly in one
of his few film appearances.
La
Bonne soupe may be a minor entry in Girardot's dazzling
filmography but it is a film in which she gives one of her liveliest
performances, a delight for anyone who cannot get enough of her unique
comedy persona.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2014
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Film Synopsis
Marie Paule lives for the moment in Cannes and has a regular place at
the casino, where she squanders what little remains of her money.
Her beauty may be fading but she is still attractive and knows that the
billionaire John Montasy has an eye on her. One day, she loses
all her money and ends up having to sell her jewels. The casino
manager, Mr Oscar, is interested to find out more about Marie
Paule. So she begins to tell him the story of her extraordinary love
life, which started when she was a young girl living with her mother...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.